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Can’t upload the new Wordpress theme you just downloaded or purchased? You may be running the wrong type of WordPress. In this post, I’ll explain the different ways to run a WordPress blog and then show you exactly how to upload a custom WordPress theme.

Three flavors of WordPress

There are three different flavors of WordPress: WordPress.com, WordPress.com Premium, and WordPress.org. Here are the differences that are relevant to us:

WordPress.com

WordPress.com Premium

WordPress.org

3rd Party Themes

x

Free

x

x*

Hosted

x

x

Custom Domain

x

x

* requires a self-hosting plan, more on that later

Note that neither WordPress.com nor WordPress.com Premium allow users to upload their own themes. If you’re in your blog’s Dashboard and don’t see an upload link under Appearance, then you’re probably using WordPress.com’s free or Premium hosted option. You’re going to need to host the blog yourself if you want to use a custom theme.

I had a problem. I would constantly find an interesting or helpful article/website/bit of information but never had any good place to store it. I’d tried bookmarks, social bookmarking sites, Evernote, and every other tool that would pop onto my radar. While many of these tools are great, and work well for a large number of people, none of them ever worked for me.

Snippets of websites, tags, text recognition, all lacked one vital element for my needs: a greater sense of context. I didn’t want to just save a website; I wanted to put that website into a larger context. It needed to fit into a comfortable nook within my existent knowledge. It needed to be a flexible and robust encyclopedia for my brain.

About Dann Berg

I'm a writer and teacher who helps non-technical people turn their app ideas into real products in their free time. My writing has appeared on MSNBC, Fox News, The Verge, LAPTOP Magazine, Mashable, and Gizmodo.

Dann’s writing has appeared in…

Praise

Taking Dann's class was one of the best purchases I've made in a long time...Dann really opened my eyes into the world of what needs to be done for apps.

Alexander VoDirector of Operations, PixieBar

Dann gives exactly what he advertises, and more. He is patient and clear, and especially good at demystifying this process for beginners.

Shira SchindelQlovi

The Non-Programmer's Guide to Getting an App in the App Store is a solid 101 class that provides non-programmers what they need to know.

Natalie LinInternal Audit Professional

A great class with concrete work on our individual projects. You leave having done real work.

Eric HoyleChief Operating Officer of Lumina Fund Management

No tech background is needed, only the willingness to go all the way. Dann explains step by step the route, all the tricks and tools needed, and takes away the mystery.

Madhav VasanDirector at Dechert

It was a great class! Very helpful, very patient and he gave us tons of information and resources for other stuff as well, I was very pleased with his class.

Rick Sanchez

Dann is a writer and teacher who helps startups get press and teaches non-technical people how to turn their app ideas into real products. His writing has appeared on MSNBC, Fox News, The Verge, LAPTOP Magazine, Mashable, and Gizmodo.